| Literature DB >> 24523700 |
Stefania Tognin1, William Pettersson-Yeo1, Isabel Valli1, Chloe Hutton2, James Woolley3, Paul Allen1, Philip McGuire1, Andrea Mechelli1.
Abstract
Neuroimaging holds the promise that it may one day aid the clinical assessment of individual psychiatric patients. However, the vast majority of studies published so far have been based on average differences between groups, which do not permit accurate inferences at the level of the individual. We examined the potential of structural Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) data for making accurate quantitative predictions about symptom progression in individuals at ultra-high risk for developing psychosis. Forty people at ultra-high risk for psychosis were scanned using structural MRI at first clinical presentation and assessed over a period of 2 years using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale. Using a multivariate machine learning method known as relevance vector regression (RVR), we examined the relationship between brain structure at first clinical presentation, characterized in terms of gray matter (GM) volume and cortical thickness (CT), and symptom progression at 2-year follow-up. The application of RVR to whole-brain CT MRI data allowed quantitative prediction of clinical scores with statistically significant accuracy (correlation = 0.34, p = 0.026; Mean Squared-Error = 249.63, p = 0.024). This prediction was informed by regions traditionally associated with schizophrenia, namely the right lateral and medial temporal cortex and the left insular cortex. In contrast, the application of RVR to GM volume did not allow prediction of symptom progression with statistically significant accuracy. These results provide proof-of-concept that it could be possible to use structural MRI to inform quantitative prediction of symptom progression in individuals at ultra-high risk of developing psychosis. This would enable clinicians to target those individuals at greatest need of preventative interventions thereby resulting in a more efficient use of health care resources.Entities:
Keywords: cortical thickness; magnetic resonance imaging; prediction; psychosis; relevance vector regression; symptom progression; ultra-high risk
Year: 2014 PMID: 24523700 PMCID: PMC3905239 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2013.00187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Demographic and clinical variables by group.
| Groups | Group comparison | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UHR ( | UHR-NT ( | UHR-T ( | ||
| Age (years) | 23.90 (4.50) | 24.06 (4.61) | 23.14 (4.18) | |
| 25/15 | 20/13 | 5/2 | χ2 = 0.29, | |
| Years of education | 12.82 (2.31) | 12.88 (2.31) | 12.50 (2.51) | |
| PANSS total baseline | 53.30 (14.95) | 50.27 (12.02) | 67.57 (19.85) | |
| PANSS total follow-up | 46.50 (13.34) | 43.61 (10.25) | 60.14 (18.27) | |
| Difference PANSS follow-up – baseline | −6.80 (16.83); | 6.67 (15.16) | 7.43 (24.78) | |
Data reflect mean (and standard deviation). df, Degrees of freedom; PANSS, positive and negative syndrome scale.
Figure 1(A) Red/Blue circles show voxels with a weight score in the top/bottom 30% of the maximum (range −0.011608 to –0.026588). Axial Slices (MNI) Left-Right: −65, −49, −40, −23, −17, 16, 25. (B) Scatter plot showing the predicted difference between baseline and follow-up total PANSS score for each subject derived from their cortical thickness data using RVR vs. the actual difference.
Neuroanatomical regions with a weight vector score in the top and in the bottom 30% of the maximum weight vector score across all regions for the cortical thickness based RVR used to accurately predict the difference between baseline and follow up total PANSS score.
| Region | Number of voxels | MNI coordinate ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Right Temporal Fusiform Cortex | 27 | 28.5, −9, −46.5 | 0.0266 |
| Right Temporal Pole | 8 | 25.5, 6, −48 | 0.0213 |
| Right Temporal Pole | 29 | 58.5, 6, −22.5 | 0.0115 |
| Left Insular Cortex | 26 | −39, 6, −4.5 | 0.0112 |
| 20 | −42, −6, −1.4 | 0.0116 | |
| Right Parahippocampal Gyrus (anterior division) | 9 | 10.5, −12, −21 | 0.00954 |
| Right Inferior Temporal Gyrus (posterior division) | 7 | 60, −27, −30 | 0.00882 |
MNI, Montreal Neurological Institute; RVR, relevance rector regression; PANSS, positive and negative syndrome scale; .
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